Eleanor Alberga is a highly-regarded mainstream British composer with commissions from the BBC Proms and The Royal Opera, Covent Garden. With a substantial output ranging from solo instrumental works to full-scale symphonic works and opera, her music is performed all over the world.
In April of 2024, Eleanor’s Piano Concerto was given its World Premiere in Liverpool to a flourish of positive reviews, with the performance streamed on Medici TV and BBC Radio 3. The work was commissioned by the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra in conjunction with the Leeds International Piano Competition, and premiered by the competition’s most recent winner Alim Beisembayev with the orchestra’s Musical Director Domingo Hindoyan conducting.
Other recent commissions and premieres for large forces have included her Symphony No.1 “Strata” - just released on the Resonus label in a premiere recording by the BBC Symphony Orchestra - her Trumpet Concerto “Invocation”, written for Pacho Flores and the London Schools Symphony Orchestra, and Rise up, O Sun!, a setting of William Blake’s poem for full orchestra and chorus, commissioned to open the 2023 Three Choirs Festival in Gloucester Cathedral.
Born 1949 in Kingston, Jamaica, Eleanor decided at the age of five to be a concert pianist. Five years later, she was composing works for the piano. In 1968 she won the biennial Royal Schools of Music Scholarship for the West Indies, which she took up in 1970 at the Royal Academy of Music in London studying piano and singing.
A budding career as a solo pianist - she was one of 3 finalists in the International Piano Concerto Competition in Dudley, UK in 1974 - was soon augmented by composition with her arrival at the London Contemporary Dance Theatre in 1978. Under the inspirational leadership of its Artistic Director, Robert Cohan, she became one of the very few pianists with the deepest understanding of modern dance, and her company class improvisations became the stuff of legend. These in turn led to works commissioned and conceived for dance by the company, and she later became the company’s Musical Director - conducting, composing and playing on LCDT’s many tours.
At different times over the course of her early career, Eleanor was a member of the African dance company Fontomfrom, and played guitar and sang with the Jamaican Folk Singers. She was part of the duo Double Exposure with her husband the violinist Thomas Bowes, and more recently they together founded and nurtured the Arcadia Festival, an original music festival in the English countryside where they live.
However, it was on leaving the London Contemporary Dance Theatre that she was able to fully embark on her calling as a composer. Since then, interest in her music across all genres - orchestral, chamber, vocal, as well as works for stage and screen - has accelerated, while her output has continued to grow. In 2015 her commissioned work Arise, Athena! for the opening of the Last Night of the BBC Proms was seen and heard by millions, and cemented a reputation as a composer of huge originality and consummate skill.
Eleanor has gathered a number of awards, most notably a NESTA Fellowship in 2000 and a Paul Hamlyn Foundation Award in 2019. In 2020 she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Music.
Eleanor was awarded an OBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours 2021 for Services to British Music.
